By Elaine X. Grant E-Commerce Times
01/29/02 10:34 AM PT
Hotel and vacation sales were key to Expedia's success. The company has been trying to
shift away from air sales toward more lucrative merchant sales, which generate better
margins.
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In a clear signal that online travel is on the mend,
Expedia (Nasdaq:
EXPE) reported much stronger than expected earnings
for the fourth quarter.
"Internet travel, it appears, is recovering more quickly
than the travel business in general," Expedia CEO Rich
Barton said, pointing to travelers' desire for good
deals and more information.
On the Upward Trail
The company reported net income for the fourth quarter of US$5 million,
or 8 cents per diluted share, compared with a year-ago net loss
of $25 million, or 53 cents per share.
Net income before special charges was $19 million -- nearly triple what
analysts expected and a far cry from the $2.6 million loss before
charges reported in the year-ago quarter. Revenue totaled $81.7 million,
almost double last year's Q4 results.
Expedia's strong showing prompted its stock to jump to $54 in
after-hours trading after closing the regular session
up 8 percent to $50.76. In early trading Tuesday, the stock
was still hovering around $54.
Expedia chief financial officer Greg Stanger said
the company expects to remain profitable in 2002,
with earnings of $80 million for the full year.
Travel Slowdown
September 11th caused an industry-wide slowdown in
travel, but online travel sites are showing a strong
recovery. According to Stanger, Expedia's January
bookings are ahead of December's levels.
"In the events post-September 11th, it appears as
though online travel has picked up surprising
momentum," Morgan Stanley analyst Mary Meeker said.
Vacation Sales
Hotel and vacation sales were key to Expedia's
success. The company has been trying to shift away from its
reliance on air sales -- for which the site gets a
flat travel agent fee -- to more lucrative merchant
sales, including hotels and vacation packages, which
generate better margins.
Expedia said its revenue from merchant sales was up 185
percent to $34 million in the quarter, while agency
revenue rose 75 percent to $42 million. Stanger said
he expects merchant revenue will increase by 125 percent in
2002, while agency revenue will increase just 15 percent.
The company also continues to add to its vacation offerings. On
January 23rd, Expedia agreed to buy wholesaler Classic
Custom Vacations for $52 million. "We expect Classic
Custom Vacations to become a key building block of our
package strategy," Stanger said.
The deal, which is expected to close on March 31st, will
add $3 million to Expedia's bottom line in 2002, plus an additional $8
million to $10 million in 2003, Stanger said.
Pulling Ahead
Though analysts are optimistic about the online travel
sector in general, Expedia's results were much better
than those reported by competitor Travelocity
(Nasdaq: TVLY), which on January 16th said it made
$4.9 million in the December quarter, falling short of
analyst expectations.
Expedia also passed Travelocity in total travel
sales. Expedia sold $704 million in travel on its site
in the quarter, compared with Travelocity's $630.2
million.